1,126 research outputs found
Determination of nitrogen in titanium nitride
Quantitative determination of nitrogen in titanium nitride involves dissolution of TiN in 10M hydrofluoric acid containing an oxidant. Released nitrogen is determined as ammonia. Best oxidizers are ferric chloride, potassium iodate, and potassium dichromate
Landscape influence on small-scale water temperature variations in a moorland catchment
Acknowledgements Iain Malcolm and staff at Marine Scotland (Pitlochry) are thanked for the provision of data from the AWS. Finally, the two anonymous reviewers are greatly acknowledged for their constructive comments.Peer reviewedPostprin
Modelling landscape controls on dissolved organic carbon sources and fluxes to streams
Acknowledgments We thank the Natural Environment Research Council NERC (project NE/K000268/1) for funding. Iain Malcolm and staff at Marine Scotland (Pitlochry) are also thanked for the provision of data from the AWS as are the Scottish Environmental Protection Agency and British Atmospheric Data Centre for the provision of meteorological data.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Stream water age distributions controlled by storage dynamics and nonlinear hydrologic connectivity : Modeling with high-resolution isotope data
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Using geophysical surveys to test tracer-based storage estimates in headwater catchments
Acknowledgements The authors are grateful to Stian Bradford, Chris Gabrielli, and Julie Timms for practical and logistical assistance. The provision of transport by Iain Malcolm and Ross Glover of Marine Scotland Science was greatly appreciated. We also thank the European Research Council ERC (project GA 335910 VEWA) for funding through the VeWa project and the Leverhulme Trust for funding through PLATO (RPG-2014-016).Peer reviewedPostprin
Detecting groundwater discharge dynamics from point-to-catchment scale in a lowland stream : Combining hydraulic and tracer methods
Acknowledgements. We would like to thank members of the Northern Rivers Institute, Aberdeen University, for helpful discussions of data. We also thank Lars Rasmussen, Jolanta Kazmierczak and Charlotte Ditlevsen for help in the field. This study is part of the Hydrology Observatory, HOBE (http://www.hobe.dk), funded by the Villum Foundation and was as well funded by the Aarhus University Research Foundation.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Neutron stars from young nearby associations the origin of RXJ1605.3+3249
Many neutron stars (NSs) and runaway stars apparently come from the same
regions on the sky. This suggests that they share the same birth places, namely
associations and clusters of young massive stars. To identify NS birth places,
we attempt to and NS-runaway pairs that could be former companions that were
disrupted in a supernova (SN). The remains of recent (<few Myr) nearby (< 150
pc) SNe should still be identifiable by observing the emission of rare
radioisotopes such as 26Al and 60Fe that can also be used as additional
indicators to confirm a possible SN event. We investigated the origin of the
isolated NS RXJ1605.3+3249 and found that it was probably born ~100 pc far from
Earth 0.45 Myr ago in the extended Corona-Australis or Octans associations, or
in Sco OB4 ~1 kpc 3.5 Myr ago. A SN in Octans is supported by the
identification of one to two possible former companions the runaway stars HIP
68228 and HIP 89394, as well as the appearance of a feature in the gamma ray
emission from 26Al decay at the predicted SN place. Both, the progenitor masses
estimated by comparison with theoretical 26Al yields as well as derived from
the life time of the progenitor star, are found to be ~11MSun.Comment: accepted for publication in PASA, special volume Astronomy with
Radioactivities; 10 pages, 4 figures, 5 table
Using repeat electrical resistivity surveys to assess heterogeneity in soil moisture dynamics under contrasting vegetation types
As the relationship between vegetation and soil moisture is complex and reciprocal, there is a need to understand how spatial patterns in soil moisture influence the distribution of vegetation, and how the structure of vegetation canopies and root networks regulates the partitioning of precipitation. Spatial patterns of soil moisture are often difficult to visualise as usually, soil moisture is measured at point scales, and often difficult to extrapolate. Here, we address the difficulties in collecting large amounts of spatial soil moisture data through a study combining plot- and transect-scale electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) surveys to estimate soil moisture in a 3.2 km 2 upland catchment in the Scottish Highlands. The aim was to assess the spatio-temporal variability in soil moisture under Scots pine forest (Pinus sylvestris) and heather moorland shrubs (Calluna vulgaris); the two dominant vegetation types in the Scottish Highlands. The study focussed on one year of fortnightly ERT surveys. The surveyed resistivity data was inverted and Archie's law was used to calculate volumetric soil moisture by estimating parameters and comparing against field measured data. Results showed that spatial soil moisture patterns were more heterogeneous in the forest site, as were patterns of wetting and drying, which can be linked to vegetation distribution and canopy structure. The heather site showed a less heterogeneous response to wetting and drying, reflecting the more uniform vegetation cover of the shrubs. Comparing soil moisture temporal variability during growing and non-growing seasons revealed further contrasts: under the heather there was little change in soil moisture during the growing season. Greatest changes in the forest were in areas where the trees were concentrated reflecting water uptake and canopy partitioning. Such differences have implications for climate and land use changes; increased forest cover can lead to greater spatial variability, greater growing season temporal variability, and reduced levels of soil moisture, whilst projected decreasing summer precipitation may alter the feedbacks between soil moisture and vegetation water use and increase growing season soil moisture deficits. © 2018 Elsevier B.V
Jahresbericht des Institutes für Meteorologie der Universität Leipzig 2007
Bearbeitete Forschungsprojekt
Assessing the impact of drought on water cycling in urban trees via in-situ isotopic monitoring of plant xylem water
CRediT authorship contribution statement A-M. Ring: Data curation, Writing – original draft, Visualization, Investigation, Validation, Formal analysis, Methodology. D. Tetzlaff: Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Writing – review & editing, Validation, Supervision, Resources, Project administration, Software. M. Dubbert: Writing – review & editing, Investigation, Methodology. J. Freymueller: Data curation, Investigation, Methodology. C. Soulsby: Conceptualization, Writing – review & editing, Validation, Supervision.Peer reviewe
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